Querying and mapping using Vapor - swift

I'm trying to write a function using Swift and Vapor but I don't understand why one statement gets printed before the other:
// Logout user
func logout(_ req: Request) throws -> Future<APIResponseMessage> {
let userID = self.checkAccessToken(req: req)
// Delete access token here
let apiResponseMessage = APIResponseMessage()
apiResponseMessage.message = "success"
apiResponseMessage.userID = userID
return apiResponseMessage.create(on: req)
}
func checkAccessToken(req: Request) -> Int {
let bearerAuthorization = req.http.headers.bearerAuthorization
guard let _bearerAuthorization = bearerAuthorization else {
// Works fine
print("no bearer incluced")
return 0
}
let _ = AccessToken.query(on: req).filter(\.accessToken == _bearerAuthorization.token).first().map(to: Int.self) { queriedAccessToken in
// This should be first
print("This gets printed second")
return queriedAccessToken!.userID!
}
// This should be second
print("This gets printed first")
return 0
}
Can anyone tell me how to make the second print statement wait until the first one is completed?
Right now it's causing my logout function to run with userID == 0 when this shouldn't be the case

As #nathan said, this is due to your code being async. Your .map callback is like the closure you pass into to a URLSession.dataTask when making request's to an external API for an iOS app.
Vapor uses a slightly different async model then what you use in iOS though, using promises and futures instead of callback closures. You can read about them in the docs.
In your case, you want to return the userID you get from the AccessToken query. To do this, you first need to change your method's return type from Int to Future<Int>. Then, instead of assigning the result of the .map call to _, you can return it from the method:
func checkAccessToken(req: Request) -> Future<Int> {
let bearerAuthorization = req.http.headers.bearerAuthorization
guard let _bearerAuthorization = bearerAuthorization else {
return req.future(0)
}
return AccessToken.query(on: req).filter(\.accessToken == _bearerAuthorization.token).first().map(to: Int.self) { queriedAccessToken in
return queriedAccessToken!.userID!
}
}
I would suggest you look into error handling for your queriedAccessToken and userID values so you aren't force-unwrapping them.

Related

swift function doesnt return a value [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Returning data from async call in Swift function
(13 answers)
Closed last year.
I'm new at Swift and that's why i need your help. So I have a function which should send request and return a value
func getAnswer() -> String? {
var answer: String?
guard let url = URL(string: "https://8ball.delegator.com/magic/JSON/_") else { return nil }
URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url) { data, response, error in
guard let data = data, error == nil else {
return
}
guard let response = response as? HTTPURLResponse else { return }
guard response.statusCode == 200 else { return }
do {
let model = try JSONDecoder().decode(Answer.self, from: data)
DispatchQueue.main.async {
answer = model.magic.answer
}
} catch let error {
fatalError(error.localizedDescription)
}
}.resume()
return answer
}
but it always returns nil.
I suppose problem is here
DispatchQueue.main.async {
answer = model.magic.answer
}
How can I fix it?
In order to know what is happening here, you need to learn about #escaping functions in swift, here is some link1 together with taking function as another functions parameter link2 written in part "Function Types as Parameter Types" , closures in Swift link3 and
Here is what is happening simplified and explained step by step :
you call getAnswer()
variable answer gets initialized with value nil by declaring answer: String?
URLSession.shared.dataTask is called and it is taking as an argument another function - closure (Data?, URLResponse?, Error?) -> Void . Also URLSession.shared.dataTask is executed on different thread and is not returning yet, but will return right after it receives response from server, which can take any time (but usually milliseconds) and will basically happen after your getAnswer() function is returning value.
your getAnswer() immediately returns value of answer which is currently nil
if you get any data from server, or server could not be reached, your URLSession.shared.dataTask function executes your code in closure. This is the code it will execute:
guard let data = data, error == nil else {
return
}
guard let response = response as? HTTPURLResponse else { return }
guard response.statusCode == 200 else { return }
do {
let model = try JSONDecoder().decode(Answer.self, from: data)
DispatchQueue.main.async {
answer = model.magic.answer
}
} catch let error {
fatalError(error.localizedDescription)
}
Your problem lies in how swift executes closures. When you call
URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url) {
// Closure code here
}
return answer
Your "Closure code here" doesn't get called until the endpoint "https://8ball.delegator.com/magic/JSON/_" actually gives a response. However, you've promised swift that your function will return an optional string immediately after the serial code of your function has completed. For this reason, by the time your "Closure code here" has run, and your "answer" variable has been updated with the correct value, your function is long gone, and has already returned a value (which in this case is whatever you've set it to at the beginning - nil).
You can fix this issue in one of two ways.
Swift's new concurrency system
By defining your own closure.
Swift's new concurrency system
You can define your function as async, meaning that the function won't have to return a value in serial, as follows.
enum GetAnswerError: Error {
case invalidURL
}
func getAnswer() async throws -> String {
var answer: String?
guard let url = URL(string: "https://8ball.delegator.com/magic/JSON/_") else {
throw GetAnswerError.invalidURL
}
// Your function will suspend here and probably be moved to a different thread. It will resume once a response has been received from the endpoint.
let (data, _) = try await URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url)
let parsedData = try JSONDecoder().decode(Answer.self, from: data)
return parsedData.magic.answer
}
When you call this function, you'll have to do so from an environment which swift can suspend. This means you'll call the function from either another async function like so
func anotherFunction() async throws -> Bool {
let answer = try await getAnswer()
// Run some code here
return answer == "YES" // Return some useful value
}
or from a Task object like so
Task {
// Note that because the function getAnswer() can throw errors, you'll have to handle them when you call the function. In this case, I'm handling them by using try?, which will simply set answer to nil if an error is thrown.
let answer = try? await getAnswer()
}
Note that when you call code in a task, you must be using the return value's from within the scope of the task. If you try to do something like this
func getAnswerTheSecond() -> String? {
var answer: String? = nil
Task {
let receivedAnswer = try? await getAnswer()
answer = receivedAnswer
}
return answer
}
You'll just end up back where you started, where swift immediately returns the nil value because your code is ran in serial. To fix this, run the relevant code on the "answer" from wherever it is needed within the task. If you are using the "answer" to update a SwiftUI view that might look like this.
struct ContentView: View {
#State var answer: String = ""
// This is the function that I've written earlier
func getAnswer() async throws -> String {
// Make URL Request
// Return the value
}
var body: some View {
Text(self.answer)
.onAppear{
Task{
let result = try? await self.getAnswer()
self.answer = result
}
}
}
}
Defining your own closure
You can define your own closure to handle the URL response; however, because of swift's new concurrency framework, this is probably not the right way to go.
If you'd like to go this way, do a google search for "Swift closures", and you'll find what you need.

Swift await for async request to complete

I have the following function by which I want to return a Int
private func queryPedometerSteps(currentStartDate: Date, currentLastDate: Date) -> Int {
var stepsGiven = 0
pedometer.queryPedometerData(from: currentStartDate, to: currentLastDate){data, error in
guard let pedometerData = data else { return }
let steps = pedometerData.numberOfSteps.intValue
print("entered query from \(currentStartDate) to \(currentLastDate) and stepped \(steps)")
stepsGiven = steps
}
return stepsGiven
}
I am using this function to return the steps, by which is assigned to a variable and then use it for another function, like this
let numberOfStepsBetweenDates = queryPedometerSteps(currentStartDate: currentStartDate, currentLastDate: currentLastDate)
anotherCall(numberOfStepsBetweenDates: Int)
I want the pedometer.queryPedometerData to finish before returning the stepsGiven. The code as it is, the function always returns 0. I already tried Dispatch groups, and semaphores, but for some reason the code stops working when I use these. Does somebody have any idea how to accomplish this? Thanks!!!
Change the function like so:
private func queryPedometerSteps(currentStartDate: Date,
currentLastDate: Date,
completion: (Int?) -> Void) {
pedometer.queryPedometerData(from: currentStartDate, to: currentLastDate) { data, error in
guard let pedometerData = data else { return completion(nil) }
let steps = pedometerData.numberOfSteps.intValue
print("entered query from \(currentStartDate) to \(currentLastDate) and stepped \(steps)")
completion(steps)
}
}
your calling code will then look like this:
queryPedometerSteps(currentStartDate: currentStartDate, currentLastDate: currentLastDate) { steps in
guard let steps = steps else { return }
anotherCall(numberOfStepsBetweenDates: steps)
}
(you may have to mark the closures as #escaping - I haven't checked the Pedometer API)

Unable to infer complex closure return type; add explicit type to disambiguate in RxSwift

I need to make multiple calls.
1. Delete Document Upload
2. Image 1 & server returns URL
3. Upload Image 2 & server returns URL
4. Create Document API contains both URLs & extra
parameters.
The code which I tried to write is in RxSwift,& MVVM.
let resultOfDocumentUpdateWithDelete =
donepressed
.filter{ $0 }
.withLatestFrom(self.existingDocumentIDChangedProperty)
.flatMapLatest {id in
let deleted_document = apiClient.deleteDocument(id).asObservable().materialize()
let upload_frontImage = deleted_document
.withLatestFrom(self.frontImageNameChangedProperty)
.flatMapLatest {image in
apiClient.uploadImage(image: image!).asObservable().materialize()
}
let upload_backImage = upload_frontImage
.withLatestFrom(self.backImageChangedProperty)
.flatMapLatest {image in
apiClient.uploadImage(image: image!).asObservable().materialize()
}
let upload_document = upload_backImage
.withLatestFrom(self.parametersChangedProperty)
.flatMapLatest {parameters in
apiClient.uploadDocument(parameters: parameters)
}
return upload_document.materialize()
}
.share(replay: 1)
Make sure, two responses of server are input in last API, so all of these will be called in a sequence.
how to do in RxSwift.
This was an interesting one! The take-away here is that when you are in doubt, go ahead and make your own operator. If it turns out that you later figure out how to do the job using the built-in operators, then you can replace yours. The only thing with making your own is that they require a lot more testing.
Note, to use the below, you will have to combineLatest of your observables and then flatMap and pass their values into this function.
// all possible results from this job.
enum ProcessResult {
case success
case deleteFailure(Error)
case imageFailue(Error)
case backImageFailure(Error)
case documentFailure(Error)
}
func uploadContent(apiClient: APIClient, documentID: Int, frontImage: UIImage, backImage: UIImage, parameters: Parameters) -> Single<ProcessResult> {
// instead of trying to deal with all the materializes, I decided to turn it into a single process.
return Single.create { observer in
// each api call happens in turn. Note that there are no roll-back semantics included! You are dealing with a very poorly written server.
let deleted = apiClient.deleteDocument(id: documentID)
.asObservable()
.share()
let imagesUploaded = deleted
.flatMap { _ in Observable.zip(apiClient.uploadImage(image: frontImage).asObservable(), apiClient.uploadImage(image: backImage).asObservable()) }
.share()
let documentUploaded = imagesUploaded
.flatMap { arg -> Single<Void> in
let (frontURL, backURL) = arg
var updatedParams = parameters
// add frontURL and backURL to parameters
return apiClient.uploadDocument(parameters: updatedParams)
}
.share()
let disposable = deleted
.subscribe(onError: { observer(.success(ProcessResult.deleteFailure($0))) })
let disposable1 = imagesUploaded
.subscribe(onError: { observer(.success(ProcessResult.imageFailue($0))) })
let disposable2 = documentUploaded
.subscribe(
onNext: { observer(.success(ProcessResult.success)) },
onError: { observer(.success(ProcessResult.documentFailure($0))) }
)
return Disposables.create([disposable, disposable1, disposable2])
}
}

Can't get data returned from dataTask()

For one week I have been trying to get a string returned from dataTask().
I already read a lot here on StackOverFlow and also from serval sites where they tackle this topic. For example, this one. So I already understand that it's that the dataTask doesn't directly return values, cause it happens on different threads and so on. I also read about closures and completion handlers. I really got the feeling that I actually already got a little clue what this is about. But I can't get it to work.
So this is my code. I just post the whole code so no-one needs to worry that the problem sticks in a part which I don't show. Everything is working fine until I try to return a value and save it for example in a variable:
func requestOGD(code gtin: String, completion: #escaping (_ result: String) -> String) {
// MARK: Properties
var answerList: [String.SubSequence] = []
var answerDic: [String:String] = [:]
var product_name = String()
var producer = String()
// Set up the URL request
let ogdAPI = String("http://opengtindb.org/?ean=\(gtin)&cmd=query&queryid=400000000")
guard let url = URL(string: ogdAPI) else {
print("Error: cannot create URL")
return
}
let urlRequest = URLRequest(url: url)
// set up the session
let config = URLSessionConfiguration.default
let session = URLSession(configuration: config)
// make the request
let task = session.dataTask(with: urlRequest) {
(data, response, error) in
// check for any errors
guard error == nil else {
print("error calling GET on /todos/1")
print(error!)
return
}
// make sure we got data
guard let responseData = data else {
print("Error: did not receive data")
return
}
// parse the result, which is String. It willbecome split and placed in a dictionary
do {
let answer = (String(decoding: responseData, as: UTF8.self))
answerList = answer.split(separator: "\n")
for entry in answerList {
let entry1 = entry.split(separator: "=")
if entry1.count > 1 {
let foo = String(entry1[0])
let bar = String(entry1[1])
answerDic[foo] = "\(bar)"
}
}
if answerDic["error"] == "0" {
product_name = answerDic["detailname"]!
producer = answerDic["vendor"]!
completion(product_name)
} else {
print("Error-Code der Seite lautet: \(String(describing: answerDic["error"]))")
return
}
}
}
task.resume()
Here I call my function, and no worries, I also tried to directly return it to the var foo, also doesn't work The value only exists within the closure:
// Configure the cell...
var foo:String = ""
requestOGD(code: listOfCodes[indexPath.row]) { (result: String) in
print(result)
foo = result
return result
}
print("Foo:", foo)
cell.textLabel?.text = self.listOfCodes[indexPath.row] + ""
return cell
}
So my problem is, I have the feeling, that I'm not able to get a value out of a http-request.
You used a completion handler in your call to requestOGD:
requestOGD(code: listOfCodes[indexPath.row]) {
(result: String) in
// result comes back here
}
But then you tried to capture and return that result:
foo = result
return result
So you're making the same mistake here that you tried to avoid making by having the completion handler in the first place. The call to that completion handler is itself asynchronous. So you face the same issue again. If you want to extract result at this point, you would need another completion handler.
To put it in simple terms, this is the order of operations:
requestOGD(code: listOfCodes[indexPath.row]) {
(result: String) in
foo = result // 2
}
print("Foo:", foo) // 1
You are printing foo before the asynchronous code runs and has a chance to set foo in the first place.
In the larger context: You cannot use any asynchronously gathered material in cellForRowAt. The cell is returned before the information is gathered. That's what asynchronous means. You can't work around that by piling on further levels of asynchronicity. You have to change your entire strategy.

Convert recursive async function to promise

I have a recursive, async function that queries Google Drive for a file ID using the REST api and a completion handler:
func queryForFileId(query: GTLRDriveQuery_FilesList,
handler: #escaping FileIdCompletionHandler) {
service.executeQuery(query) { ticket, data, error in
if let error = error {
handler(nil, error)
} else {
let list = data as! GTLRDrive_FileList
if let pageToken = list.nextPageToken {
query.pageToken = pageToken
self.queryForFileId(query: query, handler: handler)
} else if let id = list.files?.first?.identifier {
handler(id, nil)
} else {
handler(nil, nil) // no file found
}
}
}
}
Here, query is set up to return the nextPageToken and files(id) fields, service is an instance of GTLRDriveService, and FileIdCompletionHandler is just a typealias:
typealias FileIdCompletionHandler = (String?, Error?) -> Void
I've read how to convert async functions into promises (as in this thread) but I don't see how that can be applied to a recursive, async function. I guess I can just wrap the entire method as a Promise:
private func fileIdPromise(query: GTLRDriveQuery_FilesList) -> Promise<String?> {
return Promise { fulfill, reject in
queryForFileId(query: query) { id, error in
if let error = error {
reject(error)
} else {
fulfill(id)
}
}
}
}
However, I was hoping to something a little more direct:
private func queryForFileId2(query: GTLRDriveQuery_FilesList) -> Promise<String?> {
return Promise { fulfill, reject in
service.executeQuery(query) { ticket, data, error in
if let error = error {
reject(error)
} else {
let list = data as! GTLRDrive_FileList
if let pageToken = list.nextPageToken {
query.pageToken = pageToken
// WHAT DO I DO HERE?
} else if let id = list.files?.first?.identifier {
fulfill(id)
} else {
fulfill(nil) // no file found
}
}
}
}
}
So: what would I do when I need to make another async call to executeQuery?
If you want to satisfy a recursive set of promises, at where your "WHAT DO I DO HERE?" line, you'd create a new promise.then {...}.else {...} pattern, calling fulfill in the then clause and reject in the else clause. Obviously, if no recursive call was needed, though, you'd just fulfill directly.
I don't know the Google API and you didn't share your code for satisfying a promise for a list of files, so I'll have to keep this answer a bit generic: Let's assume you had some retrieveTokens routine that returned a promise that is satisfied only when all of the promises for the all files was done. Let's imagine that the top level call was something like:
retrieveTokens(for: files).then { tokens in
print(tokens)
}.catch { error in
print(error)
}
You'd then have a retrieveTokens that returns a promise that is satisfied only when then promises for the individual files were satisfied. If you were dealing with a simple array of File objects, you might do something like:
func retrieveTokens(for files: [File]) -> Promise<[Any]> {
var fileGenerator = files.makeIterator()
let generator = AnyIterator<Promise<Any>> {
guard let file = fileGenerator.next() else { return nil }
return self.retrieveToken(for: file)
}
return when(fulfilled: generator, concurrently: 1)
}
(I know this isn't what yours looks like, but I need this framework to show my answer to your question below. But it’s useful to encapsulate this “return all promises at a given level” in a single function, as it allows you to keep the recursive code somewhat elegant, without repeating code.)
Then the routine that returns a promise for an individual file would see if a recursive set of promises needed to be returned, and put its fulfill inside the then clause of that new recursively created promise:
func retrieveToken(for file: File) -> Promise<Any> {
return Promise<Any> { fulfill, reject in
service.determineToken(for: file) { token, error in
// if any error, reject
guard let token = token, error == nil else {
reject(error ?? FileError.someError)
return
}
// if I don't have to make recursive call, `fulfill` immediately.
// in my example, I'm going to see if there are subfiles, and if not, `fulfill` immediately.
guard let subfiles = file.subfiles else {
fulfill(token)
return
}
// if I got here, there are subfiles and I'm going to start recursive set of promises
self.retrieveTokens(for: subfiles).then { tokens in
fulfill(tokens)
}.catch { error in
reject(error)
}
}
}
}
Again, I know that the above isn't a direct answer to your question (as I'm not familiar with Google Drive API nor how you did your top level promise logic). So, in my example, I created model objects sufficient for the purposes of the demonstration.
But hopefully it's enough to illustrate the idea behind a recursive set of promises.